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Pace of Technology

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7 years ago
fightening.

http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-accelerating-returns
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7 years ago
You do realize that was written in 2001, right? As in when Moore's Law was still in full swing. We've hit a ceiling with speeds and cores and die sizes due to physics that's really complicated Moore's Law from the heady early days of the 21st century. I guess you could use core counts as a proxy for chip speeds, but that's a poor proxy due to how software-dependent that is.
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7 years ago
dates aside, consider the outcome.
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Firepluk
7 years ago
In which else game-community you can find such discussions? :D
ZK rocks
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Firepluk
7 years ago
Btw what's going on with multi-threading in recent spring engines and in zk itself?
Is everything the same as it was in times of 91, is there anything positive on this front promising to utilize more cores?
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7 years ago
quote:
Btw what's going on with multi-threading in recent spring engines and in zk itself?


I strongly agree. This is a matter of utmost interest.
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Skasi
7 years ago
Can haz TL;DR plx, DErankAdminmojjj?
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TL;DR: Article from 2001. Conclusion: "Most of you (again I’m using the plural form of the word) are likely to be around to see the [Cyber] Singularity". Interesting thesis, but the reasoning is flawed in my eyes.

I'd like to note that half the diagrams are "look, this shows an exponential trend with a nice regression line!". Except he often left out data from the linear plot in the exponential one when it didn't fit the regression nicely.

I do think that the topic of transcending human brainpower with artificial intelligence is interesting, but as others have pointed out, 15 year old (!) extrapolations are not exactly the best method for predicting the future today. I mean, you could conclude that, in a few centuries, we'll readily surpass the limits on computations imposed by Landauer's principle ("there's only so many computations that can be performed before the universe reaches heat death"). Also see this.

For comparison, consider the case of a simple biological population (e.g. bacteria). You'll observe exponential growth while nothing limits it, but clearly the earth (and actually the entire solar system) would be nothing but bacteria if one were to extrapolate from that.
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